At some point in time, they are told to find someone else. There is a such thing as using better adapted plant materials and turfgrass. Not perfect like what you saw growing untended. But there is a such thing as not creating situations where you are pushing on a rope.

There lyes probably the biggest problem to deal with and consider, growing plants where they don't naturally belong. Next too helping them grow as inexpensively as possible while providing results that are acceptable to the customer.

The invasives are the ones that thrive on minimal inputs. I stay away from those as well. The big fight then becomes how to get rid of the invasives that have escaped. Granola eaters become their own worst enemy when they dictate "organic" methods that do not work quickly and cost effectively or even do not work at all. There are a number of invasives in the wild and uncultivated areas that will take over because the granola eaters have their way.

Albizzia brought in for reforestation, Schefflera for ornamental use, African Tulip as a shade tree, eragrostis as a drought tolerant ground cover, and all of the common warm season weeds brought in because people were careless in the past about those things.

Albizzia brought in for reforestation, Schefflera for ornamental use, African Tulip as a shade tree, eragrostis as a drought tolerant ground cover, and all of the common warm season weeds brought in because people were careless in the past about those things.